Incidence and Prevalence of Cough in a Rural Health System: A 20‐Year Study.

Autor: Altman, Kenneth W., Young, Amanda J., Gupta, Mudit, Pichardo, Priscilla F. A., Troup, Melissa A., Blank, Jackie
Zdroj: Laryngoscope; May2023, Vol. 133 Issue 5, p1191-1196, 6p
Abstrakt: Objective: Understanding the cough population is critical to addressing clinical needs and gaps in best practice. We sought to characterize and stratify cough patients with the hypothesis that there are opportunities to improve access to care in our health system and characterize the population. Methods: Following institutional review board exempt status, a retrospective electronic record review was performed on all patients coded with ICD‐9 786.2 or ICD‐10 is R05 from January 1, 2001 through December 31, 2020 at our health system. Inclusion criteria were one or more visits for cough. The subgroup with more than one visit in each of 2 years was classified as multiple encounters. Patients were characterized by sex, age at first cough encounter, number of cough encounters, smoking status, and insurance status. Results were stratified by year, calculating frequencies, and percentages. Results: There were 302,284 unique patients diagnosed with cough, among 1,764,387 patients seen in our health system, representing an average incidence of 3.0% (2.7%–3.7%) and prevalence of 4.9% (3.1%–5.6%). New single encounter cough patients totaled 179,963, and new multiple encounter cough patients totaled 122,321. Of the 39,828,073 total encounters, there were 469,802 for new or existing cough (1.17%–1.73% annually). The age at initial presentation demonstrated 36.5% seen <10 years old, with an even distribution over the remaining decades of life. The majority were seen for cough once, but 23.8% of group two patients had two or more visits for cough in a year. Conclusion: We demonstrate a lower‐than‐expected incidence and prevalence of cough in our health population, suggesting challenges with access to care when compared to 10% prevalence and 3% of encounters previously documented in the literature. The study also provides a platform to explore the importance of pediatric cough, as well as population health and the longitudinal journey of cough patients in underserved areas. Level of Evidence: 3 Laryngoscope, 133:1191–1196, 2023 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index